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Making the Invisible Hand Visible: Reflections on the Political Economy of Freedom Professor Hannes H. Gissurarson Porto Alegre 9 April 2013
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Role of Political Economy To make the invisible hand visible, in other words to explain: 1.How one man’s gain needn’t be another man’s loss 2.How order can emerge without anyone issuing orders; spontaneous coordination Also to explain the state, especially unintended consequences of government actions
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Parable of Good Samaritan Four overlooked lessons from the parable: We need government to protect us from highwaymen We cannot trust the intellectuals, the priest and the Levite The Samaritan was a man of means; he could afford to help He did good at his own expense, not that of his neighbours
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Nature of the State Hegel: State is “March of God through History” Totalitarian 20 th Century: “March of the Devil through History” The fantasy of the benevolent despot Process, not end-of-state: power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely Process: people react to costs, produce less or more, depending on system
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Invisible Victims of Totalitarian State
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37 Million Soldiers Killed in Wars
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The Big News: 21 st Century Capitalism Not the financial crisis since 2008 The big news: BRIC countries, comprising almost half the earth’s population, joined the world economy, participating in international capitalism With economic growth, hundreds of millions migrating into middle class Economic freedom has on average not decreased, after a rapid earlier increase
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News of Capitalism’s Death Exaggerated
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Economic Freedom in the BRICs
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The Four Chinese Economies 2011
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Seven Nordic economies 2010
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Swedes in Different Economies
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Capitalism still alive and kicking! International financial crisis reminded us that capitalism is subject to fluctuations, such as credit bubbles which inevitably burst But so is government: Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Mao turned lives upside down Government made matter worse: subprime loans in US; low interest rates in US; Basel rules underestimating risks from mortgages and government bonds New financial techniques obscuring risks instead of spreading them
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Moral Hazard of Banking
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What is Unseen about Tax Revenue Tax revenue does not necessarily increase with the tax rate (Laffer Curve) With higher tax rates, people work less, switch over to untaxed activities, flee into the underground economy, invest less By over-taxing, government loses revenue Switzerland and Sweden: almost same tax revenue per capita, but different tax rates
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Laffer Curve: Useful Simplification
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Switzerland, Sweden: Laffer Curve
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Will to Work Depends on Tax Rates
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More Revenue with Lower Rate
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What is Unseen in Progressive Tax Sound philosophical and economic arguments against progressive incomes tax Not a tax on being rich, but on becoming rich With flat tax, the rich contribute more $: 36% of high income more than on low income Net tax = Gross tax – Public services and transfers Since public transfers and services more or less equal for all, net flat incomes tax indeed progressive (higher proportion paid by rich)
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Flat Incomes Tax: Net and Gross
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Net Flat Incomes Tax Is Progressive
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Tax Rates, the Rich, and Revenue 1980 In 1980, there were 116,800 rich people in the US Those rich people reported $36.2 billion of income to the IRS They paid $19.0 billion of income tax to the federal government 1988 By 1988, there were 723,700 rich people Those rich people reported $353.0 billion of income to the IRS They paid $99.7 billion of income tax to the federal government
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More Rich People, Higher Revenue
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Distribution of Tax Burden, US 2000
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The Unseen Challenge
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Parting Ways: Australia and Argentina
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Slow Growth, Low Income
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Maximize Growth, not Revenue
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Final comments Was the revival of economic freedom a return to the pre-1914 world? Two causes for optimism: new technology repeatedly proves pessimists wrong; more world trade, with the BRICs, creates wealth Two causes for pessimism: the pre-1914 world did’nt have extensive welfare obligations (to those who do not create or contribute), and it had sound money, based on the gold standard
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